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tv   Anderson Cooper 360  CNN  May 8, 2024 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT

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part of the body and for some reason, this species generally doesn't generally, but many times ends up in the brain of its host and people have this quite often. and it's called taenia solium. it's the pork tapeworm. very interesting one so as he lucky, is rfk jr. lucky that it didn't do more damage yes. especially since he only had one that means he probably was infected by someone who didn't wash their hands after using the bathroom or something. so there was or perhaps infected salad salad with a the tapeworm egg on it. he probably didn't have the tapeworm actually growing in this intestine the way this parasite work is it uses humans is the main host and pigs as the intermediate host. but if the person if he had this if you'd had a tapeworm in him, he could have been infected from from one of the tapeworm eggs inside him, but more than
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likely it was probably an accidental infection from some hygienic problem in a restaurant or somewhere else? >> all right. well, professor gardner, i appreciate your time. thank you very much. and thanks very much to all of you for being with u.s. here. >> live from milwaukee ac30 60 starts now tonight on three 60 is seen in exclusive president biden one-on-one for the first time, threatening to withhold certain u.s. weapons if israel invades rafah. also so tonight, breaking news after weeks of talking about it far republican marjorie taylor greene tries to unseat republican house speaker mike johnson. but members did about her motion to vacate his chair and what her fellow polygons now, my do about her. plus what to expect from day two of stormy daniels testimony and why the former president's defense team may now want to maximize her time on the stand good evening. thanks for joining u.s. we begin tonight with breaking news. president biden today, is that with cnn for a rare exclusive interview during a stop in the battleground, state of
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wisconsin. >> he talked about the election which we'll get to in a moment, but he's making headlines right now for what he set out, israel's ongoing war with hamas, which has become the focal point of college protests in the u.s. >> and abroad the interview comes with cia bill burns and middle leaves to this moment, working on a ceasefire you're speaking with cnn's erin burnett, president biden for the first time, laying out a new the focal point of college protests in the u.s. >> and abroad the interview comes with cia bill burns and middle leaves to this moment, working on a ceasefire you're speaking with cnn's erin burnett, president biden for the first time, laying out a new have been killed in gaza is a consequences of those bombs and other ways in which they go after population centers. >> i made it clear that if they
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go into rafah, i haven't gotten rough yet they go into rafah. i'm not for applying the weapons that had been used historically, deal with raffa, a deal with the city's, a deal with that problem we're going to continue to make sure because are secure in terms of iron dome and their ability to respond to attacks like came out of you the least recently. but it's wrong. we're not gonna we're not gonna supply the weapons and artillery shells use that have been used shells as well. yeah, totally shelf so just to understand what they're doing right now in raffa, is that not going into rafah as you don't they haven't gotten in the population what they did is right on the border. >> and it's causing problems with right now in terms of what egypt, which i've worked very hard to make sure we have a relationship. and help but i've made it clear to bb in the war
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cabinet. they're not going to get our support. if in fact they're gone, these population centers adjoint is now a cnn chief national security correspondent, alex more quiet, also, two former white house communications director is kate benningfield, who served in the administration on this far, griffin served in the previous administration alex russell. >> how do you think these comments are gonna be? received by israel? because netanyahu has made very clear how important they believe going into rafah is yeah. >> i don't think they didn't go down very well, anderson, when they take full stock of what biden is saying here, and i really think that this is the most significant shift in this question of american aid for israel to date, biden saying very clearly the us will no longer send some of the biggest weapons at the us has been sending to israel. bombs, artillery, et cetera if israel goes into those population centers in rafah, now earlier today, anderson, we heard from the idf day essentially we had dismissed the hold-up of one american shipment of bombs, essentially saying that they're
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working through it. this is just a temporary delay, but biden making very clear here that there is a change in american policy& that if, that, if israel does not heed this american warning to not go into rafah without a more comprehensive plan that american support will stop on the offensive front. now, i've spoken to members of the administration tonight, u.s. is making very clear they are differentiating between offensive and defensive weapons. biden saying the same interview that they will continue to help defend israel as we saw with the attack by iran against it israel, they will continue to help with the iron dome system. >> but there's now a major question of how much longer the us will continue support israel offensively, if essentially israel defies the us and goes into rafah, goes into these population centers. >> it's a very, very stark warning. >> it seems like there may be room, some sort of wiggly room here because the administration, the biden ministration has for a long time now been urging restraint from israel in any action in
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russia, in rafah and elsewhere and trying to sort of move them more to sort of more targeted special forces type operations to try to root out or hilton members of hamas, or obviously search for hostages israel has called their operation in rafah strategic strikes, which may just be a branding exercise, but if israel was willing to maybe adopt more the tactics that the biden ministration wants. perhaps there's wiggle room there. >> we've been told this for months, anderson, i was a newsreel back in december when jake sullivan, national security adviser said that they anticipated that israel would start switching to what he was calling a lower intensity phase of this war expected in january. and that's simply hasn't happened this is a shot across the bow by the biden administration. you could hear the president there in that clip saying that essentially this rafah operation hasn't started in earnest and u.s. understands that israel does want to take that part of the
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rafah border with egypt to better control that israel certainly sees this rafah operation limited as it is right now. by the way to pressure hamas to perhaps agreed to a ceasefire deal. but anderson, the israel has made no bones about the fact that they do plan to go into rafah, that there are four hamas battalions there that remain and they can't eradicate hamas without going in while the glass does disagree and says, you have to go in and a much more strategic way, much more tactical way. and here the president is saying that adding to that, we're not going to give you the weapons to do what it is that you want to do. adding to that pressure to go in much more tactically anderson, you think back to prison, biden's first visit to israel after october 7, and the israel is greeted that but with joy and amazement over the the the support that biden was offering israel for what they were calling a total war
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against. this is obviously a big change. obviously the president is under extraordinary political pressure here in the united states and globe hopefully, what, what do you think of this line? he's now drawing well, i think as somebody who worked for joe biden for a long time and watched him up close making these kinds of foreign policy decisions. >> i think contextually, it's important for people to understand that he doesn't make these decisions lightly. he doesn't make them in a knee-jerk way. you've you've been discussed saying, you know, for the last few months, he and his his team have been working directly with the israelis to push them to a more tactical approach to rafah. i mean, this is something that has been a priority for him as he's worked to try to discourage the israelis from from conducting conducting raids that have, have left such broad-based casualties. so this is not something, this is not the kind of thing that joe biden says or does solely under political pressure i think this is a reflection of where the
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conflict has moved over these last seven months now you've seen him consistently put tried to put public pressure, particularly early over the last few months on netanyahu and the israeli government to try to minimize casualties. and so this is from what i can see, this is simply the next step. i mean, this is him saying we're going to put action behind our words here. so i think as people are absorbing this& understanding why joe biden is making this decision now, i think it's important to have that context. that is the way that he approaches this kind of decision-making. and for him it's less about the political pressure, you if it were solely about the political pressure, then you would have seen movement from him over the last few weeks as pressure was ramping up on these college campuses. but that's just that is not the lens that he uses to make the these kinds of consequential decisions where he's weighing maintaining american security interests in the region standing by our ally, and israel and simultaneously trying to reduce the suffering that we're
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seeing in gaza. those are complicated things to balance. and so he's trying to strike that balance alyssa, israeli officials have made the point he repeatedly that any weakening or any lack of resolve shown by the us and support of israel plays into the hands of hamas. >> certainly at the negotiating table makes it less likely. i mean, there are a lot of israeli officials who will tell you or believe that having a strong military response encourages negotiators, encourages hamas to make concessions. >> well, an alex alluded to that. i think this is being announcement by joe biden's being panned by the right, the center, and even some moderate democrats, john fetterman called it disappointing because a key part of the raffa invasion is using it as leverage as a ceasefire is attempting to be negotiated. and what wasn't talked about in depth in this interviews. there are hostages, they're also still american hostages. so this sort of standoffish as though america doesn't have a vital role in this, i think is not being received well politically. but joe biden runs into the code, run into
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alienating the left who is not going to buy the idf is not in rafah. you see the explosions, you see that they are physically there in parts of it though on the border but then on the center right, the nikki haley swing voters who will determine this election, feeling like he said he had an ironclad commitment to israel. yet this does not bring of an ironclad commitment alex, i mean, in terms of israel's response to this, they have repeatedly netanyahu has repeatedly made the basically downplayed the civilian casualties and they, or they talk about the numbers of hamas fighters that they claim to have killed. >> there's no way to independently verify that and the number of civilians killed as well. obviously, the images coming out of gaza are horrific. the number of children there's so many children in the population, so many women being killed in we see these videos every single day. they are horrific to watch i'm wondering what you made it the moment that president biden acknowledged that civilians have been killed in gaza as a consequence of some of these 2000 pound bombs u.s. >> has supplied by israel. i
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mean, it's a statement of fact it is a statement of fact. >> i think it's a remarkable admission. i mean, this has been the biggest criticism by people we want to see this war end as soon as possible that the us continues to supply israel with weapons who and in turn, they continue to carry out the strikes that have led to this enormous death toll. i understand you're absolutely right that israel has kind of quibbles with those figures. but even if you look at israel's figures around 15,000 hamas fighters killed. you're still talking about around 20,000 civilians most of whom are women and children. so what you hear in that moment is the president really reckoning with the death toll that has happened in many ways at the hands of american weapons. and he said very pointedly, it's just wrong and so he certainly wants to see that the killing with these american bombs and the us has talked repeatedly about how the civilian death
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toll is too high. but in tel, now they really haven't taken any steps to constrain israel. >> we've had this remarkable well moment for the past few months where american bombs have been dropping on israel. and at the same time, american aid has been dropping in israel. the pentagon is going through extra to extraordinary lengths to build this pier off the coast of gaza to get aid in and so it's just been this from markelle contradiction but said, by the way, just you said aid and bumps and the dropping in israel been dropping and gaza human sorry, into gaza. yes. the aid drops coming from the plains from the americans, aid coming in from the sea, from land. so it's just been, it's just been incredible. and so we should note this is extremely symbolic and this is a real signal to israel, of course israel could plow ahead and carry out an operation in rafah on the ground. and from the sky, they do have enough weapons to do that. they do have enough of these bombs, but this is a strong message to
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israel that we are no longer going to send these weapons. if you go into these popular related areas and continue to kill civilians and soldiers more card comparing filler less farah griffin. thank you. now, more breaking news and other attempted republican on republican mutiny on capitol hill, republican congresswoman marjorie taylor greene, trying to unseat house speaker mike johnson, then seeing her attempt gets smacked down. now the question is what just happened here as speaker johnson is just weighed in. so it was the former president on a social network urging republicans defeat her motion to vacate the speaker's chair. but only posting it at 5:59 p.m. several minutes after the vote took place, cnn's melanie zanona has been talking to house members and her sources joins u.s. now with the latest. so how did house republicans react when greene hold up this resolution and how quickly did they move to kill it? >> well, i can tell you anderson that gop leadership was completely caught off guard. i'm told that marjorie taylor greene did not give advance notice to johnson that this was coming, but johnson knew all along that it was possible she would force a floor or vote on this motion to vacate this week. so he did have a plan in place which was
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to immediately scheduled the vote, the moment that she called it up. and that is exactly what he did. and as you saw, that motion was easily defeated with the help of democrats. but even though it did easily fail, republicans are still furious with marjorie taylor-greene for following through with this threat and some are even calling for consequences. take a listen right. now we're all focused on making sure that this institution continues to function. and i think today we showed that were tired of chaos and the nonsense and this pathetic the rerun of of an awful syndicated tv series. so it needs to come to a close. i think that there needs to be ultimately there needs to be accountability. i don't think people should be some people here, think they're more important than everyone else. they are not in there needs to be accountability for that look, i think it's idiotic moscow marjorie has lost her mind find clearly the result of the space laser. there needs to be consequences, including the loss of committee assignments. chip, roy and thomas massie, who served on the rules committee she both be removed
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immediately now, johnson has not advocated for any consequences, but he has said that they need to change the house rules next year, and he also said off the house floor today that he hopes after this vote they can put all these messy fights that have defined the 118th congress behind them. >> finally, she'd had a bunch of meetings with johnson over the last couple of days. >> did she give a reason? then for trying to force this vote there was some sense that she was trying to find an off-ramp, trying to find some resolutions, perhaps because donald trump himself, i'm told called her over the last week and urged her to back down into not fall through with this. >> so she did meet with johnson several times this week. she laid out a list of demands and exchange for back i can down but johnson was in no hurry to make a decision and he is also very clear that he's not willing to negotiate with her. he was just willing to hear out her ideas. so ultimately, she decided to pull the trigger today, which is the last let's day that house was voting this week. and so we'll see whether she continues to force these floor votes in the future, but she has not ruled out doing so. anderson? >> no. no, no. thank you. coming up next new developments in the hush money trial and the former president is fight
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against the gag order limiting what he can say about it. new details as well as about the defense's fresh willingness. it seems to keep stormy daniels on the stand longer. despite everything she said to prosecutors yesterday, or maybe because of it also, my conversation with whoopi goldberg about her loss in the space of just a few years of her mom and her brother effect their deaths had on her& remarkable stories you tell u.s. about in her new book, bits and pieces. my mother, my brother, and me. we'll be right back hi, everyone sees meanwhile, at a vrbo when other vacation rentals are just for likes dry one, you'll actually like this is pickleball is basically tennis for babies but
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there's major new development tonight ahead of stormy daniels second day of testimony when the new york hush money trial picks up tomorrow, though, will not affect the case immediately. >> it could in the weeks ahead, late today, a new york appeals court ordered both sides to submit final briefs by may 20, 2012 days from now on, the former president's challenge to his gag order as you know, he's already been cited with contempt ten times for violating and it has been warned he could face jail time if he doesn't again, is attorneys earlier today asked the appeals court to expedite their ruling and whether the gag order passes constitutional muster. now, before that happened, stormy daniels, will be back on the stand tomorrow for another day of cross by the defense tonight. what that might look like, what the defense could try to exploit and what tools are available to prosecutors for containing any damage from a witness who so far has been both compelling at times and problematic. joining me now, bestselling author and former federal prosecutor, jeffery toobin, cnn's kara scannell, who's been in court forever throughout this trial
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former federal judge, shira scheindlin and cnn senior legal analyst, elie honig careless. >> what's the lives and the gag order sent me this feeling today asking the appeals court to expedite their decision on whether the gag order was constitutional or not. the appeals court came back and said briefs do by the 20th. now, prosecutors have said they expect to rest their case around may 21, so it doesn't seem like there's going to be a ruling on this gag order while the prosecution is still calling witnesses. and of course that is the issue here, whether what donald trump can say about any possible witnesses. >> judge, what do you think the gag order what do you think that there's never ending battle over the gag order it does seem to be a never ending battle, but do i do i think the appellate division will cut it back possibly. >> there are parts of it that i think are a little bit vague, a little bit not totally clear. they may try to pin it down a little little better. >> that's what i think. i don't think they'll overturn it. i don't expect that what used to kind of organize the different well for example,
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you're not allowed to make comments about jurors but is it a comment about jurors to say this is a heavily democratic district that's an example that's always stood out to me. that's not really talking about the jurors. that's a fact that this district where the jurors are drawn from is heavily democratic and trump got 12% of the vote. so i understand his change of venue argument from the beginning. he sort of feels this isn't a venue for me he to get a fair trial, just like the government isn't truly happy anymore in florida so i understand that may be defining what it means to comment about jurors is something that could be a little bit pin down. it's just an example. >> i think we're talking client and maintenance here for the lawyers. i mean, trump is obsessed with this gag order. these lawyers are trying trying to get him acquitted in this trial. they do not need to be arguing about this gag order, which as you point out, any ruling will be after the trial. anyway, this is entirely his obsession. his pushing for political, not legal reasons. the idea that he's some sort of
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first amendment victim. but i am sure his lawyers have said to him, can we not spend time on this and instead spend time on trying to get you acquitted. but i think this is shows that this is trump's political. >> i'm to that end, do you think tomorrow that they are going to spend more time with stormy daniel's and they might have otherwise. >> well, hi actually think that they've gotten most of what they need out of stormy daniels she is someone who hates donald trump she acknowledges that she has a financial interest in the outcome of this case. she will make more money if donald trump is acquitted. what more do you need if they start asking her about her description of the sex between them, they're just going to let her repeat all of what she said. you know, i just think less is more i agree with that. i know we have new reporting at cnn, paula reid, i think youtube, qarrah, right now. >> i'm sorry. all right. you've got so many stories that's how can i keep it
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straight? but we've never according it's cnn that they do plan to cross-examine her for longer than they originally intended tomorrow. i think that's a mistake. it's a common lawyer mistake. we will hears out, plead guilty to this. sometimes do this where if a little bit is good, more must be better. and that does not apply, especially in cross-examine they are off to a very good start and the hour or 90 minutes instead, they cross-examined stormy daniels the other day, kick up there, do another hour. just remind the jury that she's biased. she hates trump. she is desperate to see him behind bars. she's told conflicting versions of this story before leave it at that you don't need to go back in that hotel room. it's the last thing you want to do. no. i agree with that, but i disagree with you in a way, it depends on the witness. some witnesses wear down and wear out. she made below it. if they keep her going for hours and hours, she may just say something that's very, very strange and effects the jury. i don't think this jury likes this moment. anyway, and the more she talks, the less they may like. one point about stormy daniels, it is worth remembering. >> she has been a witness in just a just in the building next door, year-old courthouse,
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where she was a witness against michael avenatti. she was the key witness in the case about him stealing from her. and the jury loved her, they didn't jury believed her. >> i covered that trial and i saw her testimony and her demeanor is very different in that case. in this case, i think then i mean, that was the case about her final national records and not getting a her book advance. i felt she was very composed. she was very on top of her her business. she seemed like a savvy business woman and just just was able to tell the story differently in this instant, she says seem more scattered, whether it's more nervous, obviously the stakes are different here and it's a different type of issue. she's talking yes, it is about the payment, but it's also about her encounter with trump and she just comes across a little bit more uneasy with her question. their answers, and that she was trying to appeal to the jury in such a way that they did not her jokes didn't really land. she was trying to engage with the more than that didn't really strikes me is that she has an agenda. she is trying to get this and convicted and that's coming
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through at least to me her descriptions of the sexual encounter on the witness stand were different than in past. >> a lot of past interviews. the one i did with her and 60 minutes, for instance, this time she said it was entirely consent. was it was consensual when i interviewed her. those she certainly felt like whatever i gotten myself into this, she talked about blacking out, which she described as sort of losing feeling in her hands and stuff, not remembering certain moments of it. in fact, at one point, the prosecutor said something to the effect of like, is that just a newly recovered memory which is actually a term that's used, right? do you think they will go after absolutely. that's how you cross-examine a story like this. you're not going to get stormy daniels to recant on the stand. she's not going to say i made it a lot. i don't think i don't personally think she made it all up, but the way you undermine it, do you say you sat down with anderson cooper, you spoke to him for however long it was wherein there did you say anything about passing out where in there did you say anything about he was blocking the doorway, whatever it is.
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the other thing you do is she has made contradictory statement. she signed a statement in 2018 saying this a fair never happened. and i'm not denying it because i was paid hush money. i'm denying it because it did not happen. now, she will have an explanation. she says she felt pressured and scared and that's why she signed it. but this is the way real life cross-examination works is not all tom cruise getting a jack nicholson to admit he ordered the code red. >> i'm only with you halfway because i think you're right that the statement denying is a big problem for her and that is worth focusing on. >> but going over the sexual encounter even though there are what i would consider minor inconsistencies. >> i don't think if you were donald trump's lawyer, you want the jury thinking about what went on in that hotel room all the time or much time at all? >> do the money, do the bias do heard? fixating on how much she hates him. but i would stay out of that hotel actually think i agree with you, but it'll be interesting to see whether donald trump's personal and
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political agenda compel his lawyers to get back into that and there's already the risks that if they do go down that road, the prosecution has a whole lot more. they want to ask her and the judge already put the guard rail there, but he said it's if it goes there on cross karam. >> geoff, thanks very much. a gentleman as well. elie honig. thank you very much. we have mower now is seen in an exclusive interview with president biden. next is we look at how students in the battleground state of michigan balance their feelings about the war with those about the president as part of john king's all over the map series, looking at key voting groups in swing states, he joins u.s. next water would help u.s. it's dry spots. that's long disease. >> but scott's health plus will cure lung disease going around. >> so like other people have it and it's not pick up a bag of a newscaster field are healthy plus lottery today did i read this did i get where my keys memory and thinking issues keep piling up. >> it may be due to a buildup of amyloid plaques in the brain
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genocide, joe. any of u.s. have gone to those campuses. sometimes we hear that can do you hear the message of those young americans? >> absolutely. i hear the message. look too. thanks first of all there's a legitimate right to free speech and protest there's a legitimate right to do that, right to do that. there's not elysium legitimate right to use hate speech. there's not a genomite right to threaten jewish students. there's not legitimate, right? to block people access to class. that's against the law. as against the law those demonstrations have been especially intense in michigan, a state biden won by less than three percentage points in 2020, which also features a high number of arab american voters. >> john king recently returned to michigan to discuss the war and president biden with young voters there it's part of his ongoing series all over the map to experience the election through the eyes and experience of voters in key voting blocs
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and battleground states and john king joins u.s. now, i mean, it is tough to overstate the importance of michigan. of michigan and of the younger vote and in michigan also you have the double whammy of the arab american and the muslim vote giant in the state. we were there five months ago. it was bad for the precedent that was at the beginning of this. we were just back there, anderson and i would say is worse because this is literally doubled trouble for the president wants you to look at this as the arab american news. and it talks about the protests on campus. you see here into fada on campuses, they use intifada is a word that really angers jewish students, makes them feel unsafe. but you see it here in the arab american newspapers here, it hurts the president young voters with arab americans in a state like michigan, they were keita was big win and right now six months to election day giant trouble protest amid the commencement celebration time-honored tradition on campus but this one complicated jake gray and nusken jalaa sake, are now university of michigan graduate former
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co-presidents of the college democrats, proud their school as part of a global statement was in my application whether that this was a canvas of like a history of protests are rich history of social justice movements. >> yeah, you worried though about months of war and death, months of student anger at a president who can't afford to lose michigan how much is it going to hurt the precedent however much he decides? >> yes that starts with calling for a ceasefire. >> for listening to his student voters across the country. >> this is from our first visit five months ago, pro biden's handling of the israel-hamas conflict. we're just beginning. >> it's fair to say you're glad the election is not tomorrow. >> the election was nearly a year away then six months away now, michigan is up for grabs and i did not think i'd be saying this right now. and i wish i wasn't saying that's right but i am i am genuinely concerned about which way michigan will go both. >> but some are away from campus protests helps younger
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voters see a bigger picture. >> i'm certainly not voting for the guy who is in court right now and who incited an insurrection and put three extremists on the supreme court who they're four took away rights for the first time in history, whose demonized lgbtq community, which i'm a part of that right now, things are wrong. some friends talk about staying home or voting third party. >> hundreds of thousands of people in gaza and in across palestine have been displaced, have been starved, have been killed. i think it really does come down to people's own judgments on the motivations of the president oh, what a cute boy. some are mad kin is home suburban detroit processing freshman year, at stake. >> can you talk about politics for me back in november, big reservations about the president's age, but zeroed out if the choice was biden or trump i'd go biden now, not so sure. no matter how many taylor swift for emphasis you make, you'll never understand u.s. my thing is, i think he has handled everything with israel
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and palestine terribly still leaning biden, but part of a consequential debate with friends. a lot of our generation is also considering going third party, but i fear it's going to split up the votes and end up having it fall back on trump, which i wouldn't want to happen is sigma1 began the school year, likely biden and sit definitely biden happy with her grades, even more happy. it is over is terrifying. as her fine. the escalation of other canvases has made me fear for my campaign and he's been offers nuance often missing when politicians discuss the campus protests. no problem with calls to end the killing or the speed up humanitarian aid. but fear when she sees banners like this, the intifada was a violent armed uprising targeting jews you're wearing your star david. you ever taken taken it off? >> i did. i took it off actually for about a week or two and then i put it on four or five months going ever took it off a fierce supporter of israel, but are fierce critic of prime minister benjamin
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netanyahu. i personally don't agree with how he is operating. i think that he is trying to prolong the war he would not ebrahim ghazali also speaks with nuance. he is no fan of hamas and acknowledges israel's right to respond to terrorism. >> we don't want human rights violations if you're going to conduct war conducted within the rule of law, international law. and that's all people are asking for and nothing more dissolves into groups critical to biden's michigan math, a younger voter, and an arab american. he just wrapped his first year at wayne state law school it's been stressful just seeing people that look like me and just human beings, seeing human beings on my, on my phone screen being killed day in, day out. >> and what's worse as an american, i have to see my government funding so stressful. >> a biden voter in 2020 who says the president is in deep trouble in detroit dearborn, and other michigan communities where arab and muslim americans number in the tens of thousands with older people, i would definitely say they're not
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voting for biden for younger voters were stuck in the sense that it's biden or trump. the only reason i haven't closed the door is because i think he still has an ability to change course and set a precedent for the future does all summer goals take a break? then study the third party candidates and watch to see if the president truly does change course, or if the encampment's are still a thing when classes resume in the fall john? no. i mean, of all the battleground states, michigan, his win was the most comfortable, i guess. you look at wisconsin was only 20,000 votes. is that enough in michigan to offset these problems you out, it's a great question. my answer would be as of today, no, pennsylvania was 80,000 wisconsin, michigan was 154,000. he's ceo, maybe the president has little bit wiggle room here, but look at this, trump's share, 20 47%. trump's share 2018 when he won 40, 48%. if you round up both times, the third party candidates heard hillary
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clinton. the question is, will they heard president biden? so let's come forward to the democratic primary. remember, uncommitted was on the ballot and the primary that was the protest vote against president biden. it was largely students. it was largely muslim and arab american saying we don't like your policy here. where was it the biggest wayne county where it's in wayne county? dearborn. dearborn heights, hamtramck. this is where tens of thousands, more than 100,000 arab american, muslim american voters live here in wayne county. it's also where at wayne state university he is uncommitted, got 17% of the vote, washed it our county next door, it move over. that's an arbor. that's the university of michigan. that's the students uncommitted, got 17.2% of the vote. so if the president wants to recreate this in 2020, the presidential win he has to make up. you heard the student at the uneven them because i'll major policy shift. he's got six months. he's in trouble right now, but there's time thanking. >> thanks so much. appreciate it coming up much out with whoopi goldberg. i'm living with grief for an upcoming episode of my podcast. all there is when she lost her mom and brother within five years one another. she writes in her
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new memoir that she felt alone missing the only people who truly knew her in a powerful moment with me would be answers the question she asked in her book why did you all leave me here? >> that's next how could anyone possibly know that every single one of these pistachios is guaranteed to be wonderful by reading right here wonderful pistachios are the pistachios that are wonderful. but the word wonderful on them welcome to the roots of our legacy we're excellence comfort and electricity are forever in blue welcome to beyond the mercedes. my buck, he qs suv mom jeans she passed them down to you
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brother clyde were her anchors. >> their connection was extraordinarily deep all their lives with his mom died in 2010 and her brother a few years later. their deaths had a profound effect on what being still do. and she writes incredibly lovingly about them in a new memoir titled bits and pieces. my, my mother, my brother, and me the book is out this week. it is beautiful. i recently spoke to her for a future episode of my podcast. all there is the full interview will be available in the next season is released. not sure when that's going to happen, but soon. but i wanted you to hear some what would be had to say you wrote you said your mom died, you said she prepared me for this day, but i would never be ready. i wasn't ready to not be her kid. and you also said it took a while to settle in on me that my mom's death has been the most devastating experience of my life. it was an acute trauma, is still think about her every single day yes. >> but i figured out because one of the reasons i i also thought i should read the book is because i didn't think i
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was responding correctly. i couldn't figure out why i couldn't figure out why i wasn't more devastated. >> and then a couple of days ago i figured it out a couple of days ago. >> i figured it out a couple of days ago there was nothing left unsaid with u.s so there was no there was no asked to find there was that that thing that i've seen in movies where i see people go through. >> i didn't go through it because my experience was, you know, i adored and loved you and you were the the center of my life and same with my brother. and we set it to each other all the time. >> you said i'm not in any rush to go wherever they went, but a lot of days i'm just sort of walking through it, getting where i need to go and doing what i need to do. i had no clue that things would change so dramatically from me once they were gone, was i so tethered to my mom and brother
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that i can't find my own bearing it feels that way. they were my homebase, my reality check because they both knew me from the start you also said it's not like either one could have done anything about dying. but from time to time, i feel like why did he all leave me here? >> yeah. i asked the eyes yeah. >> yeah but the answer to that is because we have stuff we got to get done. that's why we're not supposed to. this is not our time it's not our time. we got kids and grandkids and they need to know u.s. they need they need to know u.s. that's why that's my belief but yeah i find myself asking that question. >> yeah. why did you leave me do it three of u.s i hope so
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realize when it has that that it's very much it's the question like the 10-year-old mean he's asking yeah, it's like the angry question about hard-hearted child of like why did you all lee? >> yeah. no and and i once flirted once flirted with thinking about leaving then i thought how what a terrible thing that would be to do to my kid, to knowingly due to my cat who actually likes me she's a really good person and a fine woman and she's raped is she and her husband have raised three fine, very bizarre children and why would you do that? why would you leave them with that? so decided not yeah.
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>> i'm glad. yeah. i mean, two, i think, you know, when somebody dies people don't know what to say. and i i've been doing this by guess, it's on a note to say a lot of times, but i'm better at it now. but what you're reading the book about writing to people and what do you say to people when is, when you have a friend who lost a loved one well, i say no one no one who hasn't lost this way can understand so you can't be mad at them for not saying the right thing, because even you don't know what the right thing. >> so just let people love you let them common love you and just appreciate that they're not going to know what you're feeling did, not going to get the can't read your mind but know that all of these things are going to be coming at you and you're going to get really off because you why are you,
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why are you talking to me like this? because they don't know what to say you know, i just recommend saying i was so sorry and hug somebody for write them a. note, say i i don't know how to deal with this because it's never happened to me. be honest with people. goldberg is amazing. i love her and her book is lovely and remark money if you think you know her. and if you'd like your anything, you know, her there's a lot you can learn about or that's extraordinary, that's in this book. and her amazing, amazing mom, emma, who was sounds a lot like my mom. >> we'll be right back one aleve works all day. so i can keep working nine i take just one 12 hours of uninterrupted pain-related who do you take it for and for fast topical pain relief trial, even bring into
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let's try this again. >> what do you see? >> my first step is if no easton second champions sall's not winning a championship. >> getty was trying to stay positive or positive. >> he didn't win a ring the duke of sussex, prince harry's back in london. where is this arrangement from his dad? the king is ongoing and especially apparent today, more from cnn's max foster arriving at st. paul's cathedral in london prince harry here to mark ten years of the invictus games. >> oh, there are a varieties of gifts but the same spirit notable in their absence from the service. >> close members of the royal family, harry, celebrity, friends, stepping up instead
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prince william was never expected to meet his brother on this trip. but harry had reached out to his father the king wasn't available. due to his busy schedule. according to harris office, british media called it a snub as harry was taking to the pulpit as some polls, the king made his own public appearance. just a few miles away at buckingham palace's first garden party of the summer a season. father and son, so close, yet still so far apart these they haven't seen each other since a brief visit in february after the king announced he was being treated for cancer shortly before harry arrived in london. an announcement from the palace that underscore the increasingly close working relationship between william and charles the prince of wales, was officially being handed the kernel in chief title perry's former army units. harry has had a strange relationship with the royal family since he and his wife,
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meghan, stepped back from royal duties in 2020 the duke has since been highly focused on the invictus games and international sporting competition for wounded veterans established in 2014. ten years is a real thing. it's it's all birthday and invictus games foundation. and we're all very excited and thrilled wednesday's event in london will be followed by a trip to nigeria. >> we're three we'll be joined by meghan both of these appearances. i'm usually choreographed with the media marking a fresh push to highlight the couples work max foster, cnn, london just ahead, new video after tornado strike parts of eastern and central u.s how do i get my raised beds looking so good? i do have a secret, a very special secret. britt. it's organic soil from miracle grow, your great to ryan, not as great as the soil though.
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